Tag: marcom avenue

  • Hero Future Energies app partners with Marcom Avenue for website revamp

    Hero Future Energies app partners with Marcom Avenue for website revamp

    Mumbai: Hero Future Energies (HFE), a clean energy company, has joined hands with Marcom Avenue, an integrated marketing agency, to revamp its website and provide an enhanced user experience for its customers. This partnership aims to strengthen HFE’s online presence, highlight its clean energy solutions, and demonstrate its positive impact on the environment.

    The project, which involves multiple phases, will begin with meticulous planning and data collection, leading up to the launch of the revamped website. The Marcom Avenue will bring its expertise in various areas, including strategy & brainstorming, technology development & content development, and Vendor Management System (VMS) integration to deliver a comprehensive solution.

    The key deliverables of the project include a modern website design that captivates visitors, an improved user experience for seamless navigation, integration with social media platforms to expand HFE’s reach, an admin panel for efficient content management, and various technical enhancements to optimise performance.

    Hero Future Energies vice president & head – branding & corporate communication Dipankar Bose said, “This project marks an important milestone for Hero Future Energies in our digital transformation journey. We are confident that our collaboration with The Marcom Avenue will result in a visually stunning website that effectively communicates our clean energy solutions and showcases our commitment to a greener future.”

    The nature of the engagement between HFE and The Marcom Avenue is a one-time project focused on revamping the website and delivering the specified features and improvements. The Marcom Avenue will ensure that the website adheres to IT service guidelines, meets industry standards, and supports multi-language integration to cater to a wider audience.

    The Marcom Avenue, director Divanshi Guptaand said, “We are excited to partner with Hero Future Energies in their mission to drive clean and sustainable energy solutions, by combining our expertise in digital marketing and technology development, we aim to create a website that not only impresses visitors but also educates and inspires them to make environmentally conscious choices.”

  • Lockdown blues prompt brands, agencies to rethink strategies

    Lockdown blues prompt brands, agencies to rethink strategies

    MUMBAI: Even in a lockdown, the show must go on, even if it means cutting down your exenses. With cash crunch being a problem across the world, brands and agencies are figuring out how to optimise communication at the lowest cost.

    Indiantelevision.com reached out to a cross section of brands and agencies to get their perspectives on this.

    According to FCB Ulka ECD Anindya Banerjee, this is the period of hand-holding both the client and the consumer. “While the sentiments and the bottom-line have taken a hit, we can’t disappear from the lives of our consumers. Also, some businesses like financial services and banks haven’t stopped. The idea is to tailor-make messages for the consumer.”

    Giving a helping hand to clients, Marcom Avenue director Divanshi Gupta says that it is curating more personal content and strategies such as industry opinions, post-pandemic come-back strategy presentations, blogs, articles, that can help its clientele to establish themselves once Covid2019 is under control.

    Brands have been figuring out how to get through this difficult phase as well. For Liberty Shoes, the months from March to June are key for business. Says its retail executive director Anupam Bansal: “New season’s merchandise was placed in the shops, sales teams were geared up, marketing campaigns for ‘back to school’ or ‘marriage season’ was all set, but unfortunately the pandemic hit at the same time. It was difficult to quickly act on the situation and with social distancing and lockdown, mindsets are cash-conservative.”

    Without demand and revenue, Liberty’s marketing expenses also took a hit. It had to safeguard finances for rainy days, deducting the ad expenses, which, according to Bansal, was an articulated decision. The company is looking at consumer behaviour staying constant for another two quarters.

    The challenge before brands and agencies is to balance their economic losses while staying present among consumers. DigitalKites senior VP Amit Lall says that brands are reluctant to allow their focus to dilute and wish to stay relevant to the consumers. This is where digital comes into the picture with its ability to provide faster reports on investment.

    Barco India head of marketing Vijayant Khattry feels that it is only natural that most of its current campaigns revolve around remote meeting as well as virtual learning products like ClickShare Conference and weConnect as it expects their demand to increase substantially even after people go back to the office post-pandemic.

    The lockdown has seen digital spends shoot up. Banerjee says: “The pandemic has forced all companies to go digital. Fortunately, at FCB, we’ve been aligning ourselves to not work as a traditional agency for quite some time and that has helped us during these times.”

    In order to maintain the balance, Marcom Avenue has shifted its focus to branding and community building rather than sales/lead generation activities. Gupta adds, “Some of our clients have introduced new product lines during the pandemic like masks/hazmat suits/infra-thermometer, etc., looking to make available medical products to the health industry and further requiring us to create end-to-end marketing for these essential products in demand. Further, we took an initiative to analyse and tap into different industries that are booming like e-learning and pharma, so that we can help them increase their revenue and RoI.” 

    Apart from shifting focus from OOH and print to TV and digital, brands are looking at other options as well. Liberty Shoes is improving the UI/UX of its website to give a better customer experience. The company is also improving the website SEO to future-proof itself. It is also looking at strengthening its social media/influencer marketing tools to stay relevant. “Personalised communication with consumers is also taking place using the CRM database,” says Bansal.

    MediaTek marketing and communication deputy director Anuj Sidharth says, “We are also trying to increase our focus on offline public relations activities such as virtual roundtable conferences, webinar sessions, etc. MediaTek is maintaining consumers’ focus on the interesting mix of technologies that we power, especially products like mobile phones, tablets, smart TVs, wi-fi routers and voice assistant devices, which have become even more vital. We are also devising marketing mix strategies for mobile and non-mobile segments.”

    While brand building and marketing is a difficult thing for most brands to undertake simultaneously right now, communication is still essential in some way or the other.

  • COVID-19 lockdown: How brands are utilising marketing tools to engage audience in meaningful experiences

    COVID-19 lockdown: How brands are utilising marketing tools to engage audience in meaningful experiences

    In this period of emergency, one must pause to have a look around and analyse what the world communication is about, you’ll notice that there is just a single story that is being narrated by every top-notch brand across the world like Coca-Cola, Nike, Ola or Swiggy, and it is not just constrained to them, but also the native brands who are going that extra mile to ensure the safety and security of their stakeholders, the general public.

    People our age have never lived during a pandemic, let alone experienced one. Brands understand that this scenario may create a negative impact on the mental as well as the physical well-being of the population; thus, brands are leveraging their resources to keep people entertained and occupied to uplift the overall frame of mind and create an environ of positivity and cheer. We, humans, need more meaningful relationships to help us get through this, and brands are already on it- they are building trust and creating value.

    People love brands, people love to engage in conversations that get the attention, and they feel exceptional, especially when brands recognize their efforts and revert to their messages and give them a shout-out on social media platforms. Today, when people have more time in their hands, imagine what the outcome will be when the brands engage with their targeted audience, make them comfortable and weave them into a marketing strategy. Some brands have already taken upon this opportunity to interact with the audience using tools like Go Live, Contests, ‘Ask me something’, and have left the participants in their awe.

    While you are wondering how you can leverage this prospect this to your best, here are some brands who have executed a creative content strategy using different marketing tools to spread positivity and cheer:
    ●    Newspaper ads/print media:

    o    Lifebuoy Ad: Lifebuoy shared a service message that encouraged people to wash their hands with soap (any soap). There is no better way to ensure the audience that you care and that you are amongst the top players in the industry than by just shunning the competition and being out there. This is what people are looking for, a positive attitude and acts of community benefit.  

    ●    Social media marketing:

    o    McDonald’s India: McD didn’t want people to worry about the circumstances outside, and thus engaged them into a game of Instakshri- a digital version of our childhood game Antakshri. This was a fresh and new way to interact with the community and make them feel amused.

    o    OLA: A lot of businesses are currently operating through online video calls (as work from home), and people are already missing the crazy traffic on the road because of the Coronavirus outbreak. Thus, OLA gave this human emotion a quirky touch and created a post while seamlessly integrating itself in the communication:

    ●    Email marketing:

    o    Flipkart: While most of the brands out there are talking about COVID-19, Flipkart is taking this to engage with their targeted audience and to do so, are suggesting daily tasks/activities. One of the #Stayin21Days Activity:

     
                                                                          (Flipkart Email Marketing example)
    o    Swiggy: is a brand that will do that extra bit to ensure that its customers are safe and secure. With its email marketing, Swiggy is reminding people of the necessary measures to take during this outbreak, and also is engaging them into the latest trends.

    ●    Public relations: PR efforts also include corporate social responsibility initiative, and brands are being identified as community heroes for their participation and contribution towards the fight against the pandemic.

    o    Facebook and Apple: Big brands are usually prepared to fight against the crisis no matter what the situation, and through this outbreak, Facebook and Apple have donated millions of facemasks to their employees, distributor networks, healthcare workers and more in the USA and Europe to provide protection. Their efforts may be interpreted as a publicity stunt, but it also instigates a feeling of trust and care- that these brands have for its stakeholders.

    The brands today are not limiting their marketing strategies to OOH, television ads, or radio, but also are reaching out through the above-mentioned platforms to engage and interact with their target audience. Brands are not losing on any opportunity to create meaningful experiences for its customers through the pandemic, and are ensuring through the communication that the people know that we are in this together and not to lose hope anytime soon.

    (The author is director, The Marcom Avenue. The views expressed are her own and Indiantelevision.com may not subscribe to them.)

  • Are hashtags dying: The curious case of right digital strategy

    Are hashtags dying: The curious case of right digital strategy

    DELHI: “Don’t hashtag, they’re thirsty,” Ellie (played by Jenna Ortega) tells the lead character of popular Netflix series You in one of the episodes of the recently released season 2. The 13-year-old girl was teaching the art of using social media to the subject, something that comes like second nature to her generation. While she was talking about building a personal brand on the photo-sharing website of Instagram, we have been observing a sneaky exit of numerous hashtags from other brand posts as well. For example, observe the number of hashtags in the Teddy Day posts made by Manforce India, one of the most active brands on social media, in the past few years.

    From 23 hashtags in 2017, the brand has used just two hashtags for this year’s post. So, the question that arises is; are hashtags dying?

    The marketing and advertising industry doesn’t think so.

    According to The Marcom Avenue director Divanshi Gupta the conversation about hashtags dying is quite irrelevant to today’s time, when every campaign that a brand marketer conceptualises begins by producing a catchy ‘#’!

    She says, “The current status of hashtags is quite important but its application in trying to reach to the target audience is now only limited to using the relevant hashtags, as users search and follow hashtags to keep them updated on the platform. Also, hashtags have a different level of reach and meaning to different social media platforms. Thus, the chances of hashtags dying in the near future are quite bleak.”

    Logicserve Digital founder and CEO Prasad Shejale also insists that they remain a great medium of brand engagement.

    “According to Sprout Social report, an Instagram post with a single hashtag can gain 12.6 per cent more engagement compared to a post with no hashtag. They are very useful to attract the right audience and amplify the reach of posts, campaigns with an ability to make things go viral. This, in turn, helps brands target the niche markets and create brand awareness among masses. Even for me, when I post anything on my LinkedIn or other social platforms, with the right hashtag I see a significant boost in the reach.”

    However, there is a need to filter and streamline the number and the quality of hashtags a brand is using with its posts.

    Shejale adds, “Brands shouldn’t overuse hashtags as it can hamper readability and can affect the engagement. It’s also equally crucial to keep the hashtag simple and narrow to retain attention and achieve effective marketing outcomes.”

    Mirum India ECD Naila Patel highlights, “Hashtags were designed to categorise conversations better and most content creators felt the need to add multiple hashtags to explain or engage people in the discussion. But slowly, hashtags seem to have moved away from the omnipotent role to a more 'good to have' existence. In-fact a lot of famous campaigns have seen single hashtags.”

    Elaborating on how to pick the right hashtags, Isobar national head for social media Aakriti Sinha notes, “With the advent of ephemeral content, formats like memes, daily trends, Instagram TV, Insta Live and stickers and now music, hashtags anyway had begun to take a backseat with the dip in number of Instagram posts. There is no necessity to add hashtags except for the campaign hashtags for recall for promoted content. What matters is the CTA vs. the hashtag discoverability. For such content, the campaign hashtags should play a role of brand/campaign activity and/or encourage UGC using the same.”

    Gupta adds, “In a social media campaign, the manager should use a limited number of hashtags wisely to enhance reach. Also, the hashtags used should represent: you, your idea, your brand ideology, trend, and industry. Using hashtags on the basis of these parameters will help you in reaching and appearing in user’s feed who have an interest in similar searches.”

    While hashtags are expected to stay, the next point to ponder on is the right number of hashtags to put on a brand post. Even industry experts are not sure about the right number.

    While Sinha believes that the idle number should be between 5 and 10 Gupta notes that the usage of hashtags should be limited within the range of 3 to 5. Patel argues that only Instagram as a platform has a role for multiple hashtags. She pegs the ideal numbers to be three-four.

    Shejale says, “It’s difficult to decide on an exact number of ideal hashtags to be used for posts. But yes, I would say, around 7-10 hashtags are enough.”

    Gupta shares that using hashtags will help the brand be found in more places but it has to be ensured that the post doesn’t have irrelevant keywords, as it’ll lead to diminished reach.

    Hence, it is safe to conclude that hashtags are not making an exit from the digital world anytime soon, but it is more important for brands today to strategise around this tool for maximum social engagement without any irrelevant reach that can hamper the conversion rates for them.